Quote:
Originally Posted by Solecismic
I think it is. Because once football separates, the NCAA can focus on the non-revenue sports and the conferences can return to their regions.
With a few individual exceptions, the NIL money won't be that great and the value of a scholarship means a lot to these families.
It's important to remember that outside of the biggest college football teams and a significant subset of Division I men's college basketball teams, not a single college team in any sport generates any profit at all. So the NCAA amateur approach can and does work.
As for football, why pretend any more? Major college football is a professional sport. This is about brand preservation and not killing a cash cow for universities - one that finances all these amateur sports, in the end.
There's even room to preserve the amateur model for football once a super-league or leagues form.
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Except haven't the profits from football and, to a lesser extent, basketball (and a handful of other programs) been used to prop up all other sports, which are money losers?
SI